Afghanistan Analysts Network – English

AAN in the Media

The Cable situation report 6 August

Foreign Policy (blog), 6 August 2015 In The Cable, a FP blog, Borhan Osman’s dispatch on the Murree talks is summarised: Borhan Osman of the Afghan Analysts Network has a fascinating look at some of the intra-Taliban politics behind the resignation of Syed Tayyeb Agha, the leader of the group’s political office in Qatar. According […]

AAN in the Media

Contesté, le nouveau chef des taliban afghans tente le pragmatisme

Le Nouvel Observateur, 5 August 2015 AAN’s Thomas Ruttig quoted here, on his 2001 meeting with Mulla Mansur: Thomas Ruttig, codirecteur du réseau Afghanistan Analysts Network, a rencontré Mansour en 2000 quand il était ministre de l’Aviation. Il dit avoir gardé l’impression d’un homme intelligent, à l’esprit vif et qui était prêt à s’exprimer de façon plus […]

AAN in the Media

Profile: Mullah Akhtar Mansoor

al-Jazeera, 4 August 2015 In this profile of the new but still disputed Taleban leader, AAN’s Thomas Ruttig is quoted, including about his 2001 encounter with the man in Kabul when still the Taleban’s civil aviation minister: Thomas Ruttig, co-director and senior analyst of the Afghanistan Analysts Network (ANN), had brief encounters with both Mullah […]

AAN in the Media

Regime-Wechsel bei den Taliban

Frankfurter Rundschau, 3 August 2015 Op-ed by Thomas Ruttig on the change at the Taleban top from Mulla Omar to Mulla Mansur, including a rendering of his meeting with the former in late 2000 as a UN political officer about an attempt to start peace talks. Thomas analyses how the Taleban have worked under Mulla […]

AAN in the Media

Der Tod eines obskuren Gurus: Was der Tod des Taliban-Führers Mullah Omar für Afghanistans Zukunft bedeutet

IPG-Journal, 3 August 2015 In his column in the Berlin-based political web journal, Sven Hansen (of taz daily) quotes AAN’s Thomas Ruttig on the political fragmentation of the Taleban in more than just two factions, pro- and anti-talks: Damit gibt es laut Thomas Ruttig vom Afghanistan Analysts Network (AAN) jetzt drei Taliban-Positionen zu Verhandlungen: 1. Gegner […]

AAN in the Media